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Immunological memory in a teleost fish: common carp IgM B cells differentiate into memory and plasma cells. | LitMetric

Immunological memory in a teleost fish: common carp IgM B cells differentiate into memory and plasma cells.

Front Immunol

Laboratory of Fish Protistology, Institute of Parasitology, Biology Centre, Czech Academy of Sciences, České Budějovice, Czechia.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • All vertebrates, from ancient fishes to mammals, possess adaptive immunity and immunological memory, although the specific responding cells in fish have not been clearly defined.
  • Researchers infected common carp with a cnidarian parasite and observed that B cells proliferated and showed signs of differentiation, indicating they can form memory cells.
  • The study revealed that these memory B cells can persist for at least six months, alongside identifying a distinct population of plasma cells, suggesting that teleost fish possess the necessary immune components for effective long-term disease protection akin to other vertebrates.

Article Abstract

From ancient cold-blooded fishes to mammals, all vertebrates are protected by adaptive immunity, and retain immunological memory. Although immunologists can demonstrate these phenomena in all fish, the responding cells remain elusive, without the tools to study them nor markers to define them. Fundamentally, we posited that it is longevity that defines a memory cell, like how it is antibody production that defines a plasma cell. We infected the common carp with , a cnidarian parasite which causes seasonal outbreaks to which no vaccine is available. B cells proliferated and expressed gene signatures of differentiation. Despite a half-year gap between EdU labeling and sampling, IgM B cells retained the thymidine analogue, suggesting that these are at least six-month-old resting memory cells stemming from proliferating precursors. Additionally, we identified a lymphoid organ-resident population of plasma cells by the exceptional levels of IgM they express. Thus, we demonstrate that a teleost fish produces the lymphocytes key to vaccination success and long-term disease protection, supporting the idea that immunological memory is observable and universal across vertebrates.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11695322PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1493840DOI Listing

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